CASE 12.A
As an experienced middle school science teacher, you have been using a Project-Based Science approach with your students for several years. Although you like working with the students, you feel that you could be doing even more with them if you had more resources. You were talking to another teacher in your building about this limitation when she handed you a brochure that she received at a recent professional conference. She said, "This might help."
When you looked down at the brochure you saw that it was a request for grant proposals to enhance the teaching and learning in middle grades science and mathematics. You were excited about the prospect of getting support for doing Project-Based Science in your classroom. Later, when you read the request carefully, you found that, in essence, it wanted answers to the following questions:
CASE 12.B
You are working as a middle grades science education specialist for an educational consulting firm. A local school district has hired you to work with their middle grades science teacher to help them understand and use a Project-Based Science approach to teaching and learning. Because you need to have a high impact on the teachers you will be working with, you need to concisely and clearly answer questions that these teachers are sure to have for you. The questions they are likely to have are: